Conversation

Islam tries really hard to counterprogram this human tendency to make fandom larps of everything but I don’t think it succeeds. Sufi saint culture is exactly the same, despite the strictures against representational art.
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I suspect people who take religion seriously try to look for its cultural adaptive functions at too high a level of abstraction, like “meaning making” The adaptive function is mainly at the action figure level for 90% of “believers.” Narrative sensemaking with Mary Sue options.
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By the typology in the Gita of 4 types of faith, I think the pie chart is: Gnana yoga (knowledge faith): 1% Raja yoga (self-mastery faith): 9% Karma yoga (righteous-action faith): 20% Bhakti yoga (devotional/fandom faith): 70%
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This is why Zuck is smart to bet on the metaverse. The Hindu metaverse will be a huge deal. And Meta probably knows it since half the content on Indian WhatsApp is fandom traffic. Images, songs, etc.
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In case it isn’t clear, I’m taking the opposite view to the usual interpretation that comic book EU fandoms are modern religions. I think religions are old fandoms that acquired some intellectual/philosophical trappings. Religions supervene on fandom/larp phenomenology.
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I’m surprised somebody hasn’t rushed to make nft collections based on Hindu mythology. Get each minted hash blessed by a priest. Famous temples could sponsor ongoing mints. Donate at Tirupati, QR code pops, scan it and you have proof-of-darshan nft.
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Replying to
Pilgrimages are collection quests. Often the collected artifact is holy water. People have mint condition sealed little brass pots of Ganga water in their home shrines. It’s like comic-con souvenir badges or something.
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